Saturday, October 29, 2016

My brief two-day trip to Los Angeles was worthwhile on
several levels and for various aspects, but one highlight was attending the
Wednesday study class at the Higashi Honganji temple taught by Rev. Peter Hata.
The group is starting a unit covering Shinran’s poem Shoshinge, but Rev. Peter
wants them to appreciate Shoshinge not just for its content but for the
experience of chanting it. From the class and the two handouts Rev. Peter
shared with me, I almost want to rescind my

April 2015 blog post “Someone Else’s Cows.” Rev. Peter makes
a very convincing argument for chanting as a community spiritual experience
that doesn’t require knowing the meaning of the words.

I’ve been in discussion with Higashi’s North America
District about having some of our Chicago temple members considered for
ordination. For tokudo, the initial ordination, candidates must pass a chanting
test. I think a number of our members could do a passable job of the Amida
Sutra, Shoshinge and the two Larger Sutra excerpts “Tan Butsu Ge” and “San Sei
Ge,” but I voiced concern over requiring the American candidates to chant the
mitsu-yuri (“three vibrations”) style of the nembutsu-wasan follow-on to
Shoshinge.

When I helped at the Los Angeles temple (late 80s – early
90s), it was standard to chant mitsu-yuri at regular services, but since then,
the norm has become dobo-hosan, the post-war style developed to make it easier
for laypeople to chant the nembutsu-wasan follow-on.

I worried about the long uphill trek it would be to get my
tokudo candidates to learn mitsu-yuri, but after Rev. Peter’s class, I realize
this is an opportunity for me to share my enjoyment of the music of 15th
century Japan based on the folk singing “yodels” one hears in shi-gin (poetry
recitation), min-yo (folk songs), Noh and Kabuki plays. Mitsu-yuri has a
dramatic build-up – the first section starts slow and solemn, the second
section bubbles with lively anticipation and the final section is the
all-stops-out shouting of joyful tones. The musical structure expresses our
Jodo Shinshu path – first, it’s “I’ll give it a try but I don’t expect it to do
much for me because my misery is so entrenched,” then it becomes “there’s some
interesting stuff here, making me change my view of a lot of things,” and
finally, “Whoa! I’ve been searching so long and IT found me, opening me up to
the power of life around and within me. Hooray! Hallelujah!” Particularly with
the usual six Jodo Wasan verses chanted at most services, we are drawn into
Shinran’s joy of feeling liberated after being so long under the burden of
narrow self-centeredness.

In my case, I know what the words mean in Japanese, so I
wonder if my members can find the emotion in the syllables of an unfamiliar
language. In my Wednesday study class, I asked everyone to join me in chanting
dobo-hosan style, the six Jodo Wasan verses we just studied. I said, “It’s like
singing opera,” that is, you know as you pronounce the sounds that they
represent words that have meaning. But musician Ruth said most classic operas
are in languages which have similar sentence structures to English with many
recognizable words (der ring, l’amour, un
bel di), while Shinran’s 12th century Japanese is far from what
Western singers are used to.

Although I feel that knowing mitsu-yuri won’t do a whole lot
for the American candidates in helping them spread the Jodo Shinshu teachings,
for the time being because it’s a requirement, I have to help them to learn it.
I can hear some people saying we will be wasting our time trying to tackle such
outmoded liturgical music, but after reading Rev. Peter’s handouts, I think it
can be a worthwhile effort – transcending our time and travelling back to 15th
century Japan and deep into the non-verbal channels of the right-brain. The
music is to be enjoyed and hopefully the leap over the hurdle of the chanting
requirement will lead to more Americans hearing the nembutsu from their fellow
Americans.